Posts Tagged ‘coffee’

All in a warm and playful manner. Take a detour to see Coop’s headquarters where employees can play hopscotch or get your coffee from a shipping containers turned in to kitchenette or have a spontaneous and creative meeting on colorful pallets in the ”touch-down” area.

Inspired by the urban agriculture, the concept of the plame table was born, its main objective is the crop of medicinal plants to have them at home, those plants are used in teas, infusions and nutritional supplements.

Retail aside, the flagship also launched an in-shop cafe called little cloud coffee — a unique space which continues the brand’s quirky aesthetics. Check out the images above for a closer look at the shop’s interior and a glimpse at visvim’s current collection.

In the design, studio KNOL responded to the new working trends by creating a variety of thematic environments in the open space of 300 m2, allowing workers to choose the setting they felt most comfortable in at that moment.

The connections between this stations and the bar, through pipes that run along the ceiling, mimic the concept of distilling whiskey, and serve as a source of illumination. The last room, the living rooms, are divided by screens of old scissor doors, which may eventually move to change the distribution.

At Yelp we placed a fully-equipped coffee shop on the 8th floor, a break room with window seating on the 5th, and semi-private pods for chess or chatting on the 11th. Each floor’s common areas thus become common to the company at large and not just to those whose workstations occupy that level.

Among the elements of sustainable design at the new store at Walt Disney World Resort: 100 percent energy-efficient LED lighting; reclaimed oak, maple and other materials used throughout the store; community tables made from salvaged trees; a green roof consisting of hundreds of lemon grass plants.

Our proposal aims to be iconic, with a sophisticated vibe that should be new but not too unfamiliar to the local market. We decided to stay away from the bright, stereotypical color palette commonly associated with Sub-Saharan Africa and instead went with eternally chic black and white.

The project recovers the essence of traditional architecture and simple agricultural building of the past rural Catalonia; local and organic materials, warm and with textures, dodging the high-tech solutions and specializations at the expense of a traditional, simple spirit.